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A Comparison of McGrath MAC Versus C-MAC Videolaryngoscopes in Morbidly Obese Patients

A Comparison of McGrath® MAC Versus C-MAC® Videolaryngoscopes in Morbidly Obese Patients Undergoing Bariatric Surgery: A Randomized, Controlled Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03657927
Acronym
mcgrath&cmac
Enrollment
80
Registered
2018-09-05
Start date
2018-09-08
Completion date
2018-10-30
Last updated
2019-01-07

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Difficult Intubation, Morbid Obesity, Videolaryngoscopy

Keywords

Morbidly Obese, Difficult Airway Management, Videolaryngoscopy

Brief summary

Along with the technological advances in medicine, videolaryngoscope is the most commonly preferred technique for intubation of expected difficult airway management such as morbidly obese patients. In this prospective controlled clinical study, the purpose is to compare C-MAC videolaryngoscope and McGrath MAC videolaryngoscope in respect to duration of intubation, haemodynamic response, and complications related intubation of morbidly obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery.

Detailed description

It is very important for anesthesiologists to evaluate and make the airway safe in order to start and continue surgical operations. Endotracheal intubation has many important reasons such as ensuring airway control safely during surgical procedure, increasing the depth of anesthesia, need interventions for surgical or anesthetic complications, reduction of dead space, reduction of respiratory effort and prevention of aspiration risk. Mask ventilation and tracheal intubation in morbidly obese patients can be difficult with the anatomical changes caused by obesity. Reduced functional residual capacity in morbidly obese patients makes it difficult to maintain peripheral oxygen saturation at normal limits. Videolaryngoscope, developed in recent years and beginning to take place in the algorithms, facilitate difficult airway management and hence intubation. The use of videolaryngoscope in patients with difficult intubation such as morbid obesity, has been frequently reported in the literature. McGrath videolaryngoscope has a high-resolution video camera, a length-adjustable angle blade, and a light source at the tip of the blade. At the same time, the C-MAC videolaryngoscope is another advanced videolaryngoscope with a better quality video and camera system and improves the performance of videolaryngoscope with some technological changes. In this prospective controlled clinical study, the purpose is to compare C-MAC videolaryngoscope and McGrath MAC videolaryngoscope in respect to duration of intubation, haemodynamic response, and adverse events associated with intubation of morbidly obese patients undergoing bariatric surgery.

Interventions

An intubating device that is used for endotracheal intubation. Endotracheal intubation was applied by anesthesiologist with C-MAC videolaryngoscope.

An intubating device that is used for endotracheal intubation. Endotracheal intubation was applied by anesthesiologist with McGrath MAC videolaryngoscope.

Sponsors

Inonu University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SCREENING
Masking
NONE

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Age
18 Years to 65 Years
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* American Society of Anesthesiology score III, * 18-65 years, * BMI\> 40

Exclusion criteria

* American Society of Anesthesiology IV, * Under 18 years, * Over 65 years, * Under BMI\<40 * Obstetric patients, * Uncontrolled cerebrovascular disease, * Patients who refused written informed consent forms

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Time to intubationFrom beginning of holding videolaryngoscope to seeing two meaningful end-tidal carbon dioxide levels up to 3 minutesTime to intubation was defined as the time from when the anesthesiologist picked up the videolaryngoscope to when the anesthesiologist successfully placed the endotracheal tube through the vocal cords

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Heart RateFrom beginning of Anesthesia induction to 5th minutes of intubationHeart Rate
Mean Arterial PressureFrom beginning of Anesthesia induction to 5th minutes of intubationMean Arterial Pressure
Adverse EventsDuring the first 24 hour postoperativelyBleeding in the mouth, edema in the mouth, burst of intubation tube cuff, external laryngeal press, presence of head position change, laryngospasm, hypoxia, hoarseness, throat ache

Countries

Turkey (Türkiye)

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 4, 2026